Gas turbine engine with interdigitated turbine and gear assembly

- General Electric

A gas turbine engine having an interdigitated turbine assembly including a first turbine rotor and a second turbine rotor, wherein a total number of stages at the interdigitated turbine assembly is between 3 and 8, and an average stage pressure ratio at the interdigitated turbine assembly is between 1.3 and 1.9. A gear assembly is configured to receive power from the interdigitated turbine assembly, and a fan assembly is configured to receive power from the gear assembly. The interdigitated turbine assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the second turbine rotor to rotate at a second rotational speed greater than a first rotational speed at the first turbine rotor. The fan assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the fan assembly to rotate at a third rotational speed less than the first rotational speed and the second rotational speed. The interdigitated turbine assembly, the gear assembly, and the fan assembly together have a maximum AN2 at the second turbine rotor between 30 and 90.

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Description
FIELD

The present subject matter relates generally to gas turbine engines with interdigitated turbines and gear assemblies.

BACKGROUND

Gas turbine engines are challenged to achieve ever-greater efficiencies and improved fuel consumption. The overall propulsive efficiency and fuel consumption of a gas turbine engine is dependent on different factors, such as engine design, the performance and interaction of systems that form the engine, and performance debits from each system to generate thrust by a fan section.

For example, when a fan rotates at high speed, the flow of air may have discontinuities, shocks, turbulence, and interactions that result in undesired noise, propulsive losses, and other inefficiencies. Multiple fan rotor assemblies may further induce interaction noises between flows of air from several fan rotors. Noise generation may particularly limit certain engine architectures, such as open rotor engines, from usage, such as due to increasingly stringent noise regulations for commercial aircraft.

Reduction gear assemblies may allow reduced fan rotational speed while allowing for a conventional turbine rotor assembly to operate more efficiently at relatively high speeds. While gear assemblies may allow for efficiencies between the fan and conventional turbine, known gear assemblies may adversely increase engine diameter and weight. Such increases in diameter may particularly limit engine and fan diameter due to ground clearance limits for commercial aircraft.

Furthermore, interdigitated rotor assemblies may improve aerodynamic performance at an engine. However, interdigitated rotors are challenged with adverse rotor dynamics, such as rotor balancing, rotor whirl, vibrational modes, and other adverse operating conditions not found to a similar extent as conventional non-interdigitated rotor assemblies. Such issues may generally limit the rotational speed at which an interdigitated rotor may operate in comparison to conventional rotor assemblies. As such, it should be appreciated that interdigitated turbines may not interchange with conventional non-interdigitated turbines with predictable results, such as due to rotor dynamics issues arising from overhanging or cantilevered rotors, or adversely decreased turbine speed compared to fan speed and gear assembly speed reduction and weight. For example, substitution of conventional rotors with interdigitated rotors may offer improved aerodynamic performance but adversely affect overall engine performance due to decreased gear assembly efficiency, as the decreased rotor speed may cause the added weight and complexity of the gear assembly to have too great of a performance debit compared to its efficiency improvements from reduced fan speed.

While improvements in various engine systems may separately offer improvements in propulsive efficiency, fuel burn, bypass ratio, or thrust output, issues and incompatibilities arise when certain systems are combined with one another. As such, there is a need for a gas turbine engine that may integrate improved systems and overcome performance debits with regard to certain combinations of systems to produce improved thrust output, reduced noise generation, improved fuel consumption.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION

Aspects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in part in the following description, or may be obvious from the description, or may be learned through practice of the invention.

A gas turbine engine having an interdigitated turbine assembly including a first turbine rotor and a second turbine rotor, wherein a total number of stages at the interdigitated turbine assembly is between 3 and 8, and an average stage pressure ratio at the interdigitated turbine assembly is between 1.3 and 1.9. A gear assembly is configured to receive power from the interdigitated turbine assembly, and a fan assembly is configured to receive power from the gear assembly. The interdigitated turbine assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the second turbine rotor to rotate at a second rotational speed greater than a first rotational speed at the first turbine rotor. The fan assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the fan assembly to rotate at a third rotational speed less than the first rotational speed and the second rotational speed. The interdigitated turbine assembly, the gear assembly, and the fan assembly together have a maximum AN2 at the second turbine rotor between 30 and 90.

These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following description and appended claims. The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

A full and enabling disclosure of the present invention, including the best mode thereof, directed to one of ordinary skill in the art, is set forth in the specification, which makes reference to the appended figures, in which:

FIG. 1 is a cutaway side view of an exemplary embodiment of a turbomachine engine including a core engine with a gear assembly according to an aspect of the present disclosure;

FIG. 2 is an exemplary schematic embodiment of the engine of FIG. 1 according to an aspect the present disclosure;

FIG. 3 is a detailed view of a portion of the exemplary schematic embodiment of FIG. 2; and

FIG. 4 is a detailed view of a portion of the exemplary schematic embodiment of FIG. 2.

Repeat use of reference characters in the present specification and drawings is intended to represent the same or analogous features or elements of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Reference now will be made in detail to embodiments of the invention, one or more examples of which are illustrated in the drawings. Each example is provided by way of explanation of the invention, not limitation of the invention. In fact, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the present invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. For instance, features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment can be used with another embodiment to yield a still further embodiment. Thus, it is intended that the present invention covers such modifications and variations as come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.

The word “exemplary” is used herein to mean “serving as an example, instance, or illustration.” Any implementation described herein as “exemplary” is not necessarily to be construed as preferred or advantageous over other implementations.

As used herein, the terms “first”, “second”, and “third” may be used interchangeably to distinguish one component from another and are not intended to signify location or importance of the individual components.

The terms “forward” and “aft” refer to relative positions within a gas turbine engine or vehicle, and refer to the normal operational attitude of the gas turbine engine or vehicle. For example, with regard to a gas turbine engine, forward refers to a position closer to an engine inlet and aft refers to a position closer to an engine nozzle or exhaust.

The terms “upstream” and “downstream” refer to the relative direction with respect to fluid flow in a fluid pathway. For example, “upstream” refers to the direction from which the fluid flows, and “downstream” refers to the direction to which the fluid flows.

The terms “coupled,” “fixed,” “attached to,” and the like refer to both direct coupling, fixing, or attaching, as well as indirect coupling, fixing, or attaching through one or more intermediate components or features, unless otherwise specified herein.

The singular forms “a”, “an”, and “the” include plural references unless the context clearly dictates otherwise.

Approximating language, as used herein throughout the specification and claims, is applied to modify any quantitative representation that could permissibly vary without resulting in a change in the basic function to which it is related. Accordingly, a value modified by a term or terms, such as “about”, “approximately”, and “substantially”, are not to be limited to the precise value specified. In at least some instances, the approximating language may correspond to the precision of an instrument for measuring the value, or the precision of the methods or machines for constructing or manufacturing the components and/or systems. For example, the approximating language may refer to being within a 1, 2, 4, 10, 15, or 20 percent margin.

Here and throughout the specification and claims, range limitations are combined and interchanged, such ranges are identified and include all the sub-ranges contained therein unless context or language indicates otherwise. For example, all ranges disclosed herein are inclusive of the endpoints, and the endpoints are independently combinable with each other.

One or more components of the turbomachine engine or gear assembly described herein below may be manufactured or formed using any suitable process, such as an additive manufacturing process, such as a 3-D printing process. The use of such a process may allow such component to be formed integrally, as a single monolithic component, or as any suitable number of sub-components. In particular, the additive manufacturing process may allow such component to be integrally formed and include a variety of features not possible when using prior manufacturing methods. For example, the additive manufacturing methods described herein may allow for the manufacture of gears, housings, conduits, heat exchangers, or other gear assembly components having unique features, configurations, thicknesses, materials, densities, fluid passageways, headers, and mounting structures that may not have been possible or practical using prior manufacturing methods. Some of these features are described herein.

Suitable additive manufacturing techniques in accordance with the present disclosure include, for example, Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM), Selective Laser Sintering (SLS), 3D printing such as by inkjets, laser jets, and binder jets, Stereolithography (SLA), Direct Selective Laser Sintering (DSLS), Electron Beam Sintering (EBS), Electron Beam Melting (EBM), Laser Engineered Net Shaping (LENS), Laser Net Shape Manufacturing (LNSM), Direct Metal Deposition (DMD), Digital Light Processing (DLP), Direct Selective Laser Melting (DSLM), Selective Laser Melting (SLM), Direct Metal Laser Melting (DMLM), and other known processes.

As used herein, “average stage pressure ratio” is defined as total pressure ratio at a specified rotor assembly taken to a power of an inverse of the total number of stages of the specified rotor assembly.

As used herein, “AN2” is an annular flowpath area in square inches at the trailing edge of a specified rotor multiplied by a square of rotational speed in revolutions per minute (RPM) multiplied by 10−9. “Max AN2” refers to an annular flowpath area at the trailing edge of a last or aft-most stage of a specified rotor assembly multiplied by a square of maximum rotational speed in RPM of the specified rotor assembly multiplied by 10−9.

Referring now to the drawings, FIG. 1 is an exemplary embodiment of an engine 10 including an interdigitated turbine assembly according to aspects of the present disclosure. The engine 10 includes a fan assembly 14 driven by a core engine 16. The core engine 16 is encased in an outer casing 18. In various embodiments, the core engine 16 is a Brayton cycle system configured to drive the fan assembly 14. The core engine 16 is shrouded, at least in part, by an outer casing 18. The fan assembly 14 includes a plurality of fan blades 13. A vane assembly 20 is extended from the outer casing 18. The vane assembly 20 including a plurality of vanes 15 is positioned in operable arrangement with the fan blades 13 to provide thrust, control thrust vector, abate or re-direct undesired acoustic noise, or otherwise desirably alter a flow of air relative to the fan blades 13.

In certain embodiments, such as depicted in FIG. 1, the vane assembly 20 is positioned downstream or aft of the fan assembly 14. However, it should be appreciated that in some embodiments, the vane assembly 20 may be positioned upstream or forward of the fan assembly 14. In still various embodiments, the engine 10 may include a first vane assembly positioned forward of the fan assembly 14 and a second vane assembly positioned aft of the fan assembly 14. The fan assembly 14 may be configured to desirably adjust pitch at one or more fan blades 13, such as to control thrust vector, abate or re-direct noise, or alter thrust output. The vane assembly 20 may be configured to desirably adjust pitch at one or more vanes 15, such as to control thrust vector, abate or re-direct noise, or alter thrust output. Pitch control mechanisms at one or both of the fan assembly 14 or the vane assembly 20 may co-operate to produce one or more desired effects described above.

In certain embodiments, such as depicted in FIG. 1, the engine 10 is an un-ducted thrust producing system, such that the plurality of fan blades 13 is unshrouded by a nacelle or fan casing. As such, in various embodiments, the engine 10 may be configured as an unshrouded turbofan engine, an open rotor engine, or a propfan engine. In particular embodiments, the engine 10 is a single unducted rotor engine including a single row of fan blades 13. The engine 10 configured as an open rotor engine includes the fan assembly 14 having large-diameter fan blades 13, such as may be suitable for high bypass ratios, high cruise speeds (e.g., comparable to aircraft with turbofan engines, or generally higher cruise speed than aircraft with turboprop engines), high cruise altitude (e.g., comparable to aircraft with turbofan engines, or generally high cruise speed than aircraft with turboprop engines), and/or relatively low rotational speeds. Cruise altitude is generally an altitude at which an aircraft levels after climb and prior to descending to an approach flight phase.

It should be appreciated that various embodiments of the engine 10 depicted and described herein may allow for normal subsonic aircraft cruise altitude operation at or above Mach 0.5. In certain embodiments, the engine 10 allows for normal aircraft operation between Mach 0.55 and Mach 0.85 at cruise altitude. In still particular embodiments, the engine 10 allows for normal aircraft operation between Mach 0.75 and Mach 0.85. In certain embodiments, the engine 10 allows for fan assembly 14 blade tip rotational speeds at or less than 750 feet per second (fps).

Referring now to FIG. 2, a schematic embodiment of the engine 10 is provided. The fan assembly 14 includes an output shaft assembly 141 connected to a gear assembly 300. In certain embodiments, the fan assembly 14 includes a fan or propeller pitch control mechanism 142 configured to adjust pitch of one or more of the fan blades 13 (FIG. 1). The output shaft assembly 141 receives power and torque from the core engine 16 through the gear assembly 300 such as further described herein.

The core engine 16 includes a compressor section, a heat addition system 26, and a turbine section together in serial flow arrangement. The core engine 16 is extended circumferentially relative to an engine centerline axis 12. However, it should be appreciated that portions of the engine 10, such as an inlet end or an outlet end, may extend two-dimensionally. The compressor section includes a high-speed compressor 24 in serial flow arrangement downstream of a relatively low-speed compressor 23. The turbine section includes a high-speed turbine 28 in serial flow arrangement upstream of a relatively slower interdigitated turbine assembly 100. The core engine 16 includes a high-speed spool that includes the high-speed compressor 24 and the high-speed turbine 28 operably rotatably coupled together by a high-speed shaft 22. The heat addition system 26 is positioned between the high-speed compressor 24 and the high-speed turbine 28. Various embodiments of the heat addition system 26 include a combustion section. The combustion section may be configured as a deflagrative combustion section, a rotating detonation combustion section, a pulse detonation combustion section, or other appropriate heat addition system. The heat addition system 26 may be configured as one or more of a rich-burn system or a lean-burn system, or combinations thereof. In still various embodiments, the heat addition system 26 includes an annular combustor, a can combustor, a cannular combustor, a trapped vortex combustor (TVC), or other appropriate combustion system, or combinations thereof.

Referring still to FIG. 2, the core engine 16 includes the booster or low-speed compressor 23 positioned in flow relationship with the high-speed compressor 24. The low-speed compressor 23 is rotatably coupled with a first turbine rotor 32 via a first shaft 27. The interdigitated turbine assembly 100 includes the first turbine rotor 32 in vaneless successive alternating arrangement with a second turbine rotor 30, such as via a rotating outer shroud, drum, casing, or rotor. The first turbine rotor 32 and the second turbine rotor 30 are each operably connected to the gear assembly 300 to provide power to the fan assembly 14 and the low-speed compressor 23, such as described further herein. In certain embodiments, the first turbine rotor 32 and the second turbine rotor 30 are together positioned downstream of the high-speed turbine 28.

It should be appreciated that the terms “low” and “high”, or their respective comparative degrees (e.g., -er, where applicable), when used with compressor, turbine, shaft, or spool components, each refer to relative speeds within an engine unless otherwise specified. For example, a “low turbine” or “low speed turbine” defines a component configured to operate at a rotational speed, such as a maximum allowable rotational speed, lower than a “high turbine” or “high speed turbine” at the engine. Alternatively, unless otherwise specified, the aforementioned terms may be understood in their superlative degree. For example, a “low turbine” or “low speed turbine” may refer to the lowest maximum rotational speed turbine within a turbine section, a “low compressor” or “low speed compressor” may refer to the lowest maximum rotational speed turbine within a compressor section, a “high turbine” or “high speed turbine” may refer to the highest maximum rotational speed turbine within the turbine section, and a “high compressor” or “high speed compressor” may refer to the highest maximum rotational speed compressor within the compressor section. Similarly, the low speed spool refers to a lower maximum rotational speed than the high speed spool. It should further be appreciated that the terms “low” or “high” in such aforementioned regards may additionally, or alternatively, be understood as relative to minimum allowable speeds, or minimum or maximum allowable speeds relative to normal, desired, steady state, etc. operation of the engine.

Certain embodiments of the gear assembly 300 depicted and described herein allow for gear ratios and arrangements providing for proportional rotational speed of the fan assembly 14 relative to the turbine section 33. Various embodiments of the gear assembly 300 provided herein may include overall gear ratios of up to 14:1. Still various embodiments of the gear assembly provided herein may include overall gear ratios greater than 1:1. In a particular embodiment, such as further described herein, the gear assembly 300 is a two-stage parallel planetary-star gear assembly.

Although depicted as an un-shrouded or open rotor engine, it should be appreciated that aspects of the disclosure provided herein may be applied to shrouded or ducted engines, partially ducted engines, aft-fan engines, or other turbomachine configurations, including those for marine, industrial, or aero-propulsion systems. Certain aspects of the disclosure may be applicable to turbofan, turboprop, or turboshaft engines, such as turbofan, turboprop, or turboshaft engines with reduction gear assemblies.

Referring still to FIG. 2, and further detailed in FIG. 3, the first turbine rotor 32 includes a plurality of first rotors 321 extended outward along a radial direction R (FIG. 2) relative to the engine centerline axis 12. The first rotor 321 may be formed as a bladed disk or integrally bladed rotor, or as a blade-and-disk assembly including separable blades attached to a disk, drum or rotor.

The second turbine rotor 30 includes a plurality of second rotor blades 301 extended inward along the radial direction from a rotatable drum 303. The rotatable drum 303 is extended along an axial direction A (FIG. 2) and positioned outward along the radial direction of the first turbine rotor 32 and the second turbine rotor 30. The rotatable drum 303 provides support and fixture to the second rotor blades 301. Although not further depicted, the first turbine rotor 32 and/or the second turbine rotor 30 may include seals, shims, fasteners, or other components for attaching blades onto a disk, drum, rotor, or similar structure, or further for reducing undesired flow leakages or providing desired thermal responses. The second turbine rotor 30 may further include a rotatable frame 304 configured to provide structural support for the rotatable drum and second rotor blades. In certain embodiments, the rotatable drum 303 is cantilevered from the rotatable frame 304.

Referring back to FIG. 2, the engine 10 includes a plurality of bearing assemblies positioned to allow for rotation and thrust compensation of the rotor assemblies. In certain embodiments, the engine 10 includes a first bearing assembly 151 positioned at the fan assembly 14. A second bearing assembly 152 is positioned at the low-speed spool proximate to the low-speed compressor 23 and the first shaft 27. A third bearing assembly 153 is positioned at the high-speed spool proximate to the high-speed compressor 24 and the high-speed shaft 22. A fourth bearing assembly 154 is positioned at the high-speed spool proximate to the high-speed turbine 28 and the high-speed shaft 22. A fifth bearing assembly 155 is positioned at the low-speed spool proximate to the first shaft 27 and the first turbine rotor 32. A sixth bearing assembly 156 is positioned at a mid-speed spool proximate to the second shaft 29 and the second turbine rotor 30.

The engine 10 includes a plurality of static frames positioned to support the rotor assemblies and bearing assemblies. The static frame may further be configured to supply and scavenge lubricant and damper fluid to one or more bearing assemblies and store and position instrumentation and sensors. A first frame 161 is positioned in serial flow arrangement between the fan assembly 14 and the low-speed compressor 23. In certain embodiments, the first bearing assembly 151 and the gear assembly 300 are each connected to the first frame 161. A second frame 162 is positioned in serial flow arrangement between the low-speed compressor 23 and the high-speed compressor 24. In certain embodiments, the second bearing assembly 152 and the third bearing assembly 153 are each connected to the second frame 162. A third frame 163 is positioned between the high-speed turbine 28 and the interdigitated turbine assembly 100. In certain embodiments, the fourth bearing assembly 154 and the fifth bearing assembly 155 are each connected to the third frame 163. A fourth frame 164 may be positioned aft of the interdigitated turbine assembly 100. In certain embodiments, the sixth bearing assembly 156 is connected to the fourth frame 164.

Referring to FIG. 2, various embodiments of the bearing assemblies may be configured to provide radial support and receive thrust loads produced by the engine 10. The bearing assemblies include any suitable type of radial and/or axial load bearing, including, but not limited to, rolling element bearings, roller bearings, ball bearings, tapered roller bearings, spherical roller bearings, fluid film bearings, overturning moment bearings, or combinations thereof. In certain embodiments, the first bearing assembly 151 is configured as a radial load bearing at the fan assembly 14. The second bearing assembly 152 and the third bearing assembly 153 may each include any suitable combination of radial and axial load bearing, such as a roller bearing and a ball bearing. The fourth bearing assembly 154, the fifth bearing assembly 155, and the sixth bearing assembly 156 may each be configured as a radial load bearing at each respective shaft 22, 27, 29.

Referring to FIG. 2, and further detailed in FIG. 4, the gear assembly 300 includes a support structure 302 statically fixed relative to the engine centerline axis 12. In certain embodiments, the support structure 302 may be attached, connected, or integral to the first frame 161. In certain embodiments, the first bearing assembly 151 is supported by the support structure 302. The support structure 302 may further support a seventh bearing assembly 157 coupled to the second shaft 29 and the gear assembly 300. The seventh bearing assembly 157 may include one or more thrust bearings configured to receive or balance an axial thrust load from the fan assembly 14 and the interdigitated turbine assembly 100. In certain embodiments, the seventh bearing assembly 157 is coupled to the output shaft assembly 141 and is supported via the support structure 302.

The gear assembly 300 includes a first stage gear 311 operably coupled to the first shaft 27, the support structure 302, and a first ring gear 143. The output shaft assembly 141 is connected to the fan assembly 14 to transmit torque and power from the interdigitated turbine assembly 100 via the first shaft 27 and the second shaft 29. The first ring gear 143 is connected to the output shaft assembly 141. The output shaft assembly 141 including the first ring gear 143 is configured to rotate relative to the engine centerline axis 12 with the fan assembly 14. The first stage gear 311 is may generally include a plurality of the first stage gear 311 positioned in circumferential arrangement relative to the engine centerline axis 12. Each first stage gear 311 is circumferentially fixed relative to the engine centerline axis 12 by the support structure 302. Each first stage gear 311 is rotatable relative to its respective gear centerline axis 121 (FIG. 4). During operation of the engine 10, energy from rotation of the first shaft 27 is transmitted through the plurality of the first stage gear 311 to the output shaft assembly 141 via the first ring gear 143.

The gear assembly 300 further includes a second stage gear 312 operably coupled to the second shaft 29, the output shaft assembly 141, and a second ring gear 144. The second stage gear 312 is operably coupled to the output shaft assembly 141. In various embodiments, the output shaft assembly 141 includes a plurality of the second stage gear 312 in circumferential arrangement relative to the engine centerline axis 12. The second stage gear 312 is configured to allow each respective gear centerline axis to rotate around the engine centerline axis 12. The second stage gear 312 is further configured to allow each respective second stage gear 312 to rotate relative to each respective gear centerline axis (FIG. 4). The second ring gear 144 is connected to the support structure 302. As such, the second ring gear 144 is circumferentially fixed relative to the engine centerline axis 12. During operation of the engine 10, energy from rotation of the second shaft 29 is transmitted to the output shaft assembly 141 via the second stage gear 312. The second ring gear 144 provides statically determinative behavior to allow the second stage gear 312 and output shaft assembly 141 to rotate around the engine centerline axis 12 as power and torque is received from the second shaft 29.

Particular embodiments of the gear assembly 300 are configured to receive power from the interdigitated turbine assembly 100 via the first shaft 27 and first turbine rotor 32 at a first rotational speed and from the second shaft 29 and second turbine rotor 30 at a second rotational speed different from the first rotational speed. Furthermore, in particular embodiments, the gear assembly 300 is configured to transmit power to the fan assembly 14 via the output shaft assembly 141 at a third rotational speed different from the first rotational speed and the second rotational speed. In still particular embodiments, the first turbine rotor 32 is configured to rotate in a first circumferential direction opposite of the second turbine rotor 30 in a second circumferential direction (i.e., counter-rotating rotor assembly). The first turbine rotor 32 and the second turbine rotor 30 may together form the interdigitated turbine assembly 100 as a vaneless counter-rotating turbine assembly.

In various embodiments, the gear assembly 300 depicted and described herein is configured as a two-stage axially parallel planetary-star gear assembly. In certain embodiments, the first stage gear 311 is a planetary gear. In still certain embodiments, the second stage gear 312 is a planetary gear. In various embodiments, the first shaft 27 and the second shaft 29 each form star gears. Various embodiments of the engine provided herein are configured for the first turbine rotor, the second turbine rotor, and the fan assembly to rotate at three-different rotational speeds during operation of the engine. The first turbine rotor and the second turbine rotor are each configured to operate at higher rotational speeds than the fan assembly. The first turbine rotor and the second turbine rotor are together configured to rotate up to twice (2×) greater than the other. In certain embodiments, the second turbine rotor is configured to rotate at a greater rotational speed than the first turbine rotor. However, in other embodiments, the first turbine rotor may be configured to rotate at a greater rotational speed than the second turbine rotor.

In particular embodiments, the first stage gear 311 is configured to receive power from the first shaft 27 at the first rotational speed lower than the second rotational speed received at the second stage gear 312 from the second shaft 29. Stated differently, the gear assembly 300 is configured to allow the first turbine rotor 32 to rotate slower than the second turbine rotor 30. In still certain embodiments, the gear assembly 300 includes a first gear ratio at the first stage gear 311 and a second gear ratio at the second stage gear 312 greater than the first gear ratio. It should be appreciated that the gear ratio corresponds to a ratio of the respective turbine rotor rotational speed to the fan assembly rotational speed. In one embodiment, the second gear ratio is greater than 1:1 and is 14:1 or less, i.e., the rotational speed at the mid-speed spool is greater than the fan assembly rotational speed and 14× or less than the fan assembly rotational speed. In another embodiment, the first gear ratio is greater than 1:1 and less than the second gear ratio i.e., the rotational speed of the low-speed spool is greater than the fan assembly rotational speed and less than the mid-speed spool rotational speed. In still another embodiment, the second gear ratio is 14:1 or less and greater than 3:1. In yet another embodiment, the second gear ratio is 10:1. In still yet another embodiment, the second gear ratio is 7:1 or less.

In particular embodiments, the second gear ratio is at least 16% greater than the first gear ratio. In some embodiments, the second gear ratio is greater than the first gear ratio by 133% or less. In a still particular embodiment, the second gear ratio is greater than the first gear ratio by 100% or less. In one embodiment, the second gear ratio is 7:1 and the first gear ratio is 6:1.

It should be appreciated that various embodiments of the engine depicted and described herein may interchange the proportions, ratios, or percentages of the first gear ratio and the second gear ratio. Various embodiments of the engine may interchange the first turbine rotor for the second turbine rotor. In still various embodiments, the first turbine rotor may be configured to operate at a greater rotational speed than the second turbine rotor based on ranges, proportions, ratios, or percentages provided herein.

Referring to FIG. 2, and in further detail in FIG. 3, the interdigitated turbine assembly 100 is configured to generate an average stage pressure ratio between 1.3 and 1.9 and a maximum AN2 between 30 and 90 relative to the second turbine rotor 30. In one embodiment, the average stage pressure ratio is between 1.3 and 1.7 with the maximum AN2 between 30-70. In another embodiment, the average stage pressure ratio is between 1.5 and 1.9 with the maximum AN2 between 71-90. In a particular embodiment, the maximum AN2 is generated relative to the rotatable frame at the second turbine rotor 30. In various embodiments, the interdigitated turbine assembly 100 generates the average stage pressure ratio and maximum AN2 via a total number of stages between 3 and 8. In one embodiment, the second turbine rotor 30 includes an equal quantity of stages as the first turbine rotor 32. In another embodiment, the second turbine rotor 30 includes one stage more than the first turbine rotor 32.

It should be appreciated that particular ranges of the average stage pressure ratio provided herein correspond to particular quantities of blades at the interdigitated turbine assembly 100 as understood by one skilled in the art based on a desired configuration of heat addition system 26 and heat release generated therefrom. Furthermore, the average stage pressure ratio corresponds to specific ranges of gear ratios at the gear assembly 300 provided herein. Still furthermore, the average stage pressure ratio corresponds to specific ranges of maximum blade tip rotational speed at the fan assembly 14 of up to 750 fps.

In particular embodiments, the quantity of blades 21 is between three (3) and twenty (20). In still certain embodiments, a sum of the quantity of fan blades 13 and the quantity of vanes 15 is between twenty (20) and thirty (30). The particular quantities or ranges of blades to vanes provided herein may provide particularly desirable ratios of increased thrust output versus decreased noise generation, decreased weight, decreased dimensions, and reduced specific fuel consumption, and combinations thereof, over known engine arrangements. Still further, combinations of particular ranges or limits of blade tip speed at the fan assembly 14, gear ratios at the gear assembly 300, average stage pressure ratio and AN2 at the interdigitated turbine section 100, and structures corresponding therewith provide particular and unexpected benefits over known fan assemblies, gear assemblies, or turbine sections.

For instance, although various embodiments of interdigitated or vaneless turbines are known in the art, the present disclosure provides particular ranges of average stage pressure ratio and AN2 and structures that correspond to ranges of flowpath area and blade quantity particularly beneficial for providing high fan bypass ratios, increased engine efficiency, reduced weight, increased thrust output, and reduced noise generation.

In another instance, although various gear assemblies are known in the art, the present disclosure provides particular structures and ranges of gear ratios relative to particular ranges of fan assembly blade tip speed and interdigitated turbine assembly speed, pressure ratio, and flowpath area particularly beneficial for providing increased thrust output, reduced noise generation at the fan assembly and/or core engine, reduced specific fuel consumption, reduced weight, increased engine efficiency, and greater fan bypass ratios.

In yet another instance, although various fan assemblies are known in the art, the present disclosure provides particular ranges of fan blade quantities and ratios of fan blades to vanes to generate particularly beneficial ratios of thrust output to noise generation for unducted single rotor engines. Particular ranges and structures of gear assemblies and interdigitated turbine assemblies described herein further allow for such thrust output and noise generation benefits without undesired losses due to excessive weight (e.g., via large gear assemblies and/or turbine sections), excessive rotational speed input to the gear assembly, or excessive heat generation and release from a heat addition system.

This written description uses examples to disclose the invention, including the best mode, and also to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the invention, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they include structural elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they include equivalent structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal languages of the claims.

Further aspects of the invention are provided by the subject matter of the following clauses:

1. A gas turbine engine having an interdigitated turbine assembly including a first turbine rotor and a second turbine rotor, wherein a total number of stages at the interdigitated turbine assembly is between 3 and 8, and an average stage pressure ratio at the interdigitated turbine assembly is between 1.3 and 1.9. A gear assembly is configured to receive power from the interdigitated turbine assembly, and a fan assembly is configured to receive power from the gear assembly. The interdigitated turbine assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the second turbine rotor to rotate at a second rotational speed greater than a first rotational speed at the first turbine rotor. The fan assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the fan assembly to rotate at a third rotational speed less than the first rotational speed and the second rotational speed. The interdigitated turbine assembly, the gear assembly, and the fan assembly together have a maximum AN2 at the second turbine rotor between 30 and 90.

2. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the gear assembly is a two-stage parallel planetary-star gear assembly.

3. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, the engine including a first shaft operably coupled to the first turbine rotor and a first stage gear at the gear assembly, and a second shaft operably coupled to the second turbine rotor and a second stage gear at the gear assembly.

4. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the first stage gear includes a first stage gear ratio relative to the first turbine rotor and the fan assembly, and wherein the second stage gear includes a second stage gear ratio relative to the second turbine rotor and the fan assembly, and wherein the second stage gear ratio is between 16% and 133% greater than the first stage gear ratio, or between 16% and 100% greater than the first stage gear ratio, or configured to allow the second turbine rotor to operate at up to twice (2×) the speed of the first turbine rotor.

5. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein an output shaft assembly is operably connected to the fan assembly, the first stage gear, and the second stage gear.

6. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the second gear ratio is greater than 1:1, and wherein the second gear ratio is 14:1 or less.

7. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the average stage pressure ratio is between 1.3 and 1.7 with the maximum AN2 between 30-70.

8. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the average stage pressure ratio is between 1.5 and 1.9 with the maximum AN2 between 71-90.

9. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the second turbine rotor has an equal quantity of stages as the first turbine rotor.

10. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the second turbine rotor has one stage more than the first turbine rotor.

11. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the fan assembly has between 3 and 20 blades.

12. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein a vane assembly is positioned aerodynamically aft of the fan assembly, and wherein a sum of a quantity of blades at the fan assembly and a quantity of vanes at the vane assembly is between 20 and 30.

13. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the gas turbine engine is an unducted gas turbine engine.

14. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the first turbine rotor includes a plurality of first rotors extended outward along a radial direction, and wherein the second turbine rotor includes a plurality of second rotor blades extended inward along the radial direction from a rotatable drum, and wherein the second rotor comprises a rotatable frame configured to support the rotatable drum and the second rotor blades, and wherein the total number of stages consists of the plurality of first rotors, the plurality of second rotor blades, and the rotatable frame.

15. A gas turbine engine, the engine including an interdigitated turbine assembly that includes a first turbine rotor and a second turbine rotor, wherein a total number of stages at the interdigitated turbine assembly is between 3 and 8, the total number of stages consisting of a plurality of first rotors of the first turbine rotor, a plurality of second rotor blades extended from a rotatable drum of the second turbine rotor, and a rotatable frame, and wherein an average stage pressure ratio at the interdigitated turbine assembly relative to the rotatable frame is between 1.3 and 1.9. A gear assembly is configured to receive power from the interdigitated turbine assembly. An unducted fan assembly is configured to receive power from the gear assembly. The interdigitated turbine assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the second turbine rotor to rotate at a second rotational speed greater than a first rotational speed at the first turbine rotor. The fan assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the fan assembly to rotate at a third rotational speed less than the first rotational speed at the first turbine rotor and the second rotational speed at the second turbine rotor, and the interdigitated turbine assembly, the gear assembly, and the unducted fan assembly together have a maximum AN2 at the second turbine rotor between 30 and 90.

16. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the gear assembly is a two-stage parallel planetary-star gear assembly.

17. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the gear assembly includes a first stage gear having a first stage gear ratio relative to the first turbine rotor and the fan assembly, and a second stage gear having a second stage gear ratio relative to the second turbine rotor and the fan assembly, wherein the second stage gear ratio is between 16% and 100% greater than the first stage gear ratio.

18. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the second gear ratio is greater than 1:1, and wherein the second gear ratio is 14:1 or less.

19. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the fan assembly has between 3 and 20 blades.

20. The gas turbine engine of any clause herein, wherein the average stage pressure ratio corresponds to a maximum blade tip rotational speed at the fan assembly of 750 feet per second.

Claims

1. A gas turbine engine, the engine comprising:

an interdigitated turbine assembly comprising a first turbine rotor and a second turbine rotor, wherein a total number of stages at the interdigitated turbine assembly is between 3 and 8, and wherein an average stage pressure ratio at the interdigitated turbine assembly is between 1.3 and 1.9;
a gear assembly configured to receive power from the interdigitated turbine assembly; and
a fan assembly configured to receive power from the gear assembly,
wherein the interdigitated turbine assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the second turbine rotor to rotate at a second rotational speed greater than a first rotational speed at the first turbine rotor,
wherein the fan assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the fan assembly to rotate at a third rotational speed less than the first rotational speed at the first turbine rotor and the second rotational speed at the second turbine rotor,
wherein the interdigitated turbine assembly, the gear assembly, and the fan assembly together have a maximum AN2 at the second turbine rotor between 30 and 90,
wherein the gear assembly is a two-stage parallel planetary-star gear assembly,
wherein the engine further comprises: a first shaft operably coupled to the first turbine rotor and a first stage gear at the gear assembly, and a second shaft operably coupled to the second turbine rotor and a second stage gear at the gear assembly,
wherein the first stage gear comprises a first stage gear ratio relative to the first turbine rotor and the fan assembly,
wherein the second stage gear comprises a second stage gear ratio relative to the second turbine rotor and the fan assembly, and
wherein the second stage gear ratio is between 16% and 133% greater than the first stage gear ratio.

2. The gas turbine engine of claim 1, wherein an output shaft assembly is operably connected to the fan assembly, the first stage gear, and the second stage gear.

3. The gas turbine engine of claim 2, wherein the second gear ratio is greater than 1:1, and wherein the second gear ratio is 14:1 or less.

4. The gas turbine engine of claim 1, wherein the average stage pressure ratio is between 1.3 and 1.7 with the maximum AN2 between 30-70.

5. The gas turbine engine of claim 1, wherein the average stage pressure ratio is between 1.5 and 1.9 with the maximum AN2 between 71-90.

6. The gas turbine engine of claim 1, wherein the second turbine rotor has an equal quantity of stages as the first turbine rotor.

7. The gas turbine engine of claim 1, wherein the second turbine rotor has one stage more than the first turbine rotor.

8. The gas turbine engine of claim 1, wherein the fan assembly has between 3 and 20 blades.

9. The gas turbine engine of claim 8, wherein a vane assembly is positioned aerodynamically aft of the fan assembly, and wherein a sum of a quantity of blades at the fan assembly and a quantity of vanes at the vane assembly is between 20 and 30.

10. The gas turbine engine of claim 9, wherein the gas turbine engine is an unducted gas turbine engine.

11. The gas turbine engine of claim 1, wherein the first turbine rotor comprises a plurality of first rotors extended outward along a radial direction, and wherein the second turbine rotor comprises a plurality of second rotor blades extended inward along the radial direction from a rotatable drum, and wherein the second rotor comprises a rotatable frame configured to support the rotatable drum and the second rotor blades, and wherein the total number of stages consists of the plurality of first rotors, the plurality of second rotor blades, and the rotatable frame.

12. A gas turbine engine, the engine comprising:

an interdigitated turbine assembly comprising a first turbine rotor and a second turbine rotor, wherein a total number of stages at the interdigitated turbine assembly is between 3 and 8, the total number of stages comprising a plurality of first rotors of the first turbine rotor, a plurality of second rotor blades extended from a rotatable drum of the second turbine rotor, and a rotatable frame, and wherein an average stage pressure ratio at the interdigitated turbine assembly relative to the rotatable frame is between 1.3 and 1.9;
a gear assembly configured to receive power from the interdigitated turbine assembly; and
an unducted fan assembly configured to receive power from the gear assembly,
wherein the interdigitated turbine assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the second turbine rotor to rotate at a second rotational speed greater than a first rotational speed at the first turbine rotor,
wherein the fan assembly and the gear assembly are together configured to allow the fan assembly to rotate at a third rotational speed less than the first rotational speed at the first turbine rotor and the second rotational speed at the second turbine rotor,
wherein the interdigitated turbine assembly, the gear assembly, and the unducted fan assembly together have a maximum AN2 at the second turbine rotor between 30 and 90, and
wherein the gear assembly comprises: a first stage gear having a first stage gear ratio relative to the first turbine rotor and the fan assembly; and a second stage gear having a second stage gear ratio relative to the second turbine rotor and the fan assembly, wherein the second stage gear ratio is between 16% and 100% greater than the first stage gear ratio.

13. The gas turbine engine of claim 12, wherein the gear assembly is a two-stage parallel planetary-star gear assembly.

14. The gas turbine engine of claim 12, wherein the second gear ratio is greater than 1:1, and wherein the second gear ratio is 14:1 or less.

15. The gas turbine engine of claim 12, wherein the fan assembly has between 3 and 20 blades.

16. The gas turbine engine of claim 12, wherein the average stage pressure ratio corresponds to a maximum blade tip rotational speed at the fan assembly of 750 feet per second.

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Patent History
Patent number: 11428160
Type: Grant
Filed: Dec 31, 2020
Date of Patent: Aug 30, 2022
Patent Publication Number: 20220205387
Assignee: GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY (Schenectady, NY)
Inventors: Pranav Kamat (Bangalore), Bhaskar Nanda Mondal (Bangalore), Jeffrey Donald Clements (Mason, OH), Vaibhav Madhukar Deshmukh (Bangalore)
Primary Examiner: Gerald L Sung
Application Number: 17/139,138
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: Downstream Of Runner (415/211.2)
International Classification: F02C 7/36 (20060101); F02C 3/06 (20060101); F02K 3/04 (20060101); F02K 3/072 (20060101); F01D 1/26 (20060101); F02C 3/067 (20060101);